The biggest streamer on Twitch is Canadian Félix “xQc” Lengyel, a former pro in Blizzard’s shooter Overwatch. In a podcast he now explains that some streamers pretend to be broke even if they are rich. They would maintain this “facade” because the “Twitch” system encourages this behavior.
What does xQc say exactly? In a Twitch stream on November 29, xQc once again got into a rage. He says, partly with some unintelligible passages:
Streamers who pretend they don’t make much money. Streamers who are like, “Hey, I’m broke.” Even I blow it, “Buddy, you’re rich. Stop being such a jerk.” They’re doing it on purpose. They pretend to joke about it – but they don’t joke about it: they say they don’t make much money. But that’s not true.
That’s a brick in their facade. It has to do with the whole system. The system rewards that. It’s a system that makes them money. And one of those bricks is pretending you don’t have any money. And if you pull out a brick and then another, the facade collapses.
xQc
xQc accuses streamers of putting up a false facade
What does the man mean by that? In his own way, xQc declares:
Is he right about that? It’s certainly the case with some of the streamers he criticizes. There are different ways that content creators deal with money. This has to do with which target group you are addressing and how you feel about this target group:
How much money do “normal” Twitch streamers make? Who can make a “good” living off Twitch?
But xQc is right that part of many streamers’ image is to appear less wealthy than they actually are in order to keep a flow of donations going. This takes on absurd proportions when people with a lot of money demand €5 from viewers who are threatened by poverty.
There was a big discussion with the streamer HasanAbi in August 2021 because as a “left streamer” he could afford a large villa:
Streamer criticizes rich people on Twitch, buys house for $ 2.7 million